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Neocon Nuttery
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Title: Sliming Graeme Frost (PAUL KRUGMAN)
Source: New York Times
URL Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/12/o ... 2194988-GSI7/QzB8NsCoV1X4paBsQ
Published: Oct 12, 2007
Author: PAUL KRUGMAN
Post Date: 2007-10-12 09:21:56 by aristeides
Keywords: None
Views: 956
Comments: 38

Sliming Graeme Frost

By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: October 12, 2007

Two weeks ago, the Democratic response to President Bush’s weekly radio address was delivered by a 12-year-old, Graeme Frost. Graeme, who along with his sister received severe brain injuries in a 2004 car crash and continues to need physical therapy, is a beneficiary of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program. Mr. Bush has vetoed a bipartisan bill that would have expanded that program to cover millions of children who would otherwise have been uninsured.

What followed should serve as a teaching moment.

First, some background. The Frosts and their four children are exactly the kind of people S-chip was intended to help: working Americans who can’t afford private health insurance.

The parents have a combined income of about $45,000, and don’t receive health insurance from employers. When they looked into buying insurance on their own before the accident, they found that it would cost $1,200 a month — a prohibitive sum given their income. After the accident, when their children needed expensive care, they couldn’t get insurance at any price.

Fortunately, they received help from Maryland’s S-chip program. The state has relatively restrictive rules for eligibility: children must come from a family with an income under 200 percent of the poverty line. For families with four children that’s $55,220, so the Frosts clearly qualified.

Graeme Frost, then, is exactly the kind of child the program is intended to help. But that didn’t stop the right from mounting an all-out smear campaign against him and his family.

Soon after the radio address, right-wing bloggers began insisting that the Frosts must be affluent because Graeme and his sister attend private schools (they’re on scholarship), because they have a house in a neighborhood where some houses are now expensive (the Frosts bought their house for $55,000 in 1990 when the neighborhood was rundown and considered dangerous) and because Mr. Frost owns a business (it was dissolved in 1999).

You might be tempted to say that bloggers make unfounded accusations all the time. But we’re not talking about some obscure fringe. The charge was led by Michelle Malkin, who according to Technorati has the most-trafficked right-wing blog on the Internet, and in addition to blogging has a nationally syndicated column, writes for National Review and is a frequent guest on Fox News.

The attack on Graeme’s family was also quickly picked up by Rush Limbaugh, who is so important a player in the right-wing universe that he has had multiple exclusive interviews with Vice President Dick Cheney.

And G.O.P. politicians were eager to join in the smear. The New York Times reported that Republicans in Congress “were gearing up to use Graeme as evidence that Democrats have overexpanded the health program to include families wealthy enough to afford private insurance” but had “backed off” as the case fell apart.

In fact, however, Republicans had already made their first move: an e-mail message from the office of Mitch McConnell, the Senate minority leader, sent to reporters and obtained by the Web site Think Progress, repeated the smears against the Frosts and asked: “Could the Dems really have done that bad of a job vetting this family?”

And the attempt to spin the media worked, to some extent: despite reporting that has thoroughly debunked the smears, a CNN report yesterday suggested that the Democrats had made “a tactical error in holding up Graeme as their poster child,” and closely echoed the language of the e-mail from Mr. McConnell’s office.

All in all, the Graeme Frost case is a perfect illustration of the modern right-wing political machine at work, and in particular its routine reliance on character assassination in place of honest debate. If service members oppose a Republican war, they’re “phony soldiers”; if Michael J. Fox opposes Bush policy on stem cells, he’s faking his Parkinson’s symptoms; if an injured 12-year-old child makes the case for a government health insurance program, he’s a fraud.

Meanwhile, leading conservative politicians, far from trying to distance themselves from these smears, rush to embrace them. And some people in the news media are still willing to be used as patsies.

Politics aside, the Graeme Frost case demonstrates the true depth of the health care crisis: every other advanced country has universal health insurance, but in America, insurance is now out of reach for many hard-working families, even if they have incomes some might call middle-class.

And there’s one more point that should not be forgotten: ultimately, this isn’t about the Frost parents. It’s about Graeme Frost and his sister.

I don’t know about you, but I think American children who need medical care should get it, period. Even if you think adults have made bad choices — a baseless smear in the case of the Frosts, but put that on one side — only a truly vicious political movement would respond by punishing their injured children.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 22.

#4. To: aristeides (#0)

every other advanced country has universal health insurance, but in America, insurance is now out of reach for many hard-working families, even if they have incomes some might call middle-class.

Government programs have to be based on NEED not "entitled".

At the top medicare is breaking this country financially. Paying for the flu shots for those with assets of millions is beyond reason and is just a fraction of giveaways. Having earned, paid for and entitled to becomes meaningless when this country is wallowing in ten trillion dollar debt.

Cynicom  posted on  2007-10-12   9:35:41 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Cynicom (#4)

The merits of the issue no doubt can be debated.

But it's the trashing of the Frost family that outrages me.

aristeides  posted on  2007-10-12   9:36:48 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: aristeides (#5)

But it's the trashing of the Frost family that outrages me.

We all know full well that politics is a dirty business..

In this case a family was "used" by one group and "misused" by another. NEITHER group gives one good damn about the child or the family as they are "nobodies" that will be cast aside and forgotten next week.

Cynicom  posted on  2007-10-12   9:44:11 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Cynicom (#9)

ONE group slimed a child and his family.

Please remind me of the last time the Democrats did that. Frankly, I can't remember an instance.

aristeides  posted on  2007-10-12   9:47:24 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: aristeides (#10)

ONE group slimed a child and his family.

BOTH groups are using the family. Neither give a damn.

Cynicom  posted on  2007-10-12   9:54:27 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: Cynicom (#12)

Please remind me of the last time the Democrats have slimed a child and his family like this.

aristeides  posted on  2007-10-12   9:57:25 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: aristeides (#14)

Please remind me of the last time the Democrats have slimed a child and his family like this.

Party has NOTHING to do with this issue, it is "politics".

Attempting to portray any party as being morally superior when politics is the game is totally meaningless.

Cynicom  posted on  2007-10-12   10:01:29 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: Cynicom (#15)

Are you admitting that you too can't think of a time when the Democrats did this?

aristeides  posted on  2007-10-12   10:03:06 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#19. To: aristeides, Cynicom (#17)

Are you admitting that you too can't think of a time when the Democrats did this?

Uh, does slimey behavior towards children mean using a child as a pawn to promote a political message?

scrapper2  posted on  2007-10-12   11:36:58 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: scrapper2 (#19)

Paul Krugman has a terrific column--reinforcing Karen's Swamp outrage the past few days--about the Republican propaganda campaign to discredit a child. Krugman's larger point is that this is business as usual for the latter-day Republican Party and also for much of the mainstream media. (Did CNN really buy the GOP disinformation? If so, shame on them.) My hope is that the stakes are high enough, and public interest will be intense enough in 2008 to undermine the effectiveness of slime campaigns. In the past--Willie Horton, impeachment, Bush's anti-McCain slime in 2000, the Swift Boats in 2004--I've tried to respond rapidly to this sort of stuff. I've got to say, though, the Graeme Frost campaign is about the lowest and skuzziest I've seen so far.

Even as mainstream a writer as Joe Klein agrees with me, not you.

I wonder when you'll see that you've lost, and give it up.

aristeides  posted on  2007-10-12   11:42:34 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#22. To: aristeides (#20)

Even as mainstream a writer as Joe Klein agrees with me, not you.

I wonder when you'll see that you've lost, and give it up.

Oh my I feel wounded to the core - Joe Klein, a joynalist, agrees with you and not me. That's a shock! I'm reeling.

lalalalala

I will continue to challenge your partisan pronouncements about the Frost case as long as you promote your elitist one sided pre-packaged revisionist version of the Frosts' misadventure in the course of deciding they wanted their 15 minutes of fame.

scrapper2  posted on  2007-10-12   12:03:45 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 22.

#24. To: scrapper2 (#22)

your elitist one sided pre-packaged revisionist version

I'm the elitist, unlike the guys supporting the Republicans' policies that divert all the wealth to the superrich?

You got that one straight out of Karl Rove's book of tricks, didn't you?

aristeides  posted on  2007-10-12 12:07:56 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 22.

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